Toy Commander is an action combat game released for the SEGA Dreamcast in 1999. The French studio No Cliché developed the title, and SEGA published it as one of the launch window standouts for the console. Players step into the role of a young boy named Andy, whose toys have rebelled against him after he outgrew them. The action takes place across rooms of a house, with kitchens, bedrooms, garages, and gardens turned into miniature war zones. You pilot a wide selection of toy vehicles, including planes, trucks, tanks, helicopters, and boats, each with its own handling and weapon loadout. The mix of arcade flight combat and ground based skirmishes gives the game a flavor that sets it apart from other Dreamcast releases. Missions vary from racing competitors across the kitchen counter to bombing enemy strongholds built from household objects. The whimsical premise of warring toys gives every mission a charm that few other titles of the era matched. The playful tone, paired with sharp Dreamcast visuals and smooth controls, made Toy Commander a memorable early showcase for what the console could deliver.
Updated: Jun 22, 2026
Screenshots

1 GB · Dreamcast ROMs
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Specifications
| Platform | Dreamcast ROMs |
|---|---|
| Genre | Racing |
| File Size | 1 GB |
| Release Year | 1999 |
| Developer | No Cliché |
| Updated | Jun 22, 2026 |
Overview
Toy Commander is an action combat game released for the SEGA Dreamcast in 1999. The French studio No Cliché developed the title, and SEGA published it as one of the launch window standouts for the console. Players step into the role of a young boy named Andy, whose toys have rebelled against him after he outgrew them. The action takes place across rooms of a house, with kitchens, bedrooms, garages, and gardens turned into miniature war zones. You pilot a wide selection of toy vehicles, including planes, trucks, tanks, helicopters, and boats, each with its own handling and weapon loadout. The mix of arcade flight combat and ground based skirmishes gives the game a flavor that sets it apart from other Dreamcast releases. Missions vary from racing competitors across the kitchen counter to bombing enemy strongholds built from household objects. The whimsical premise of warring toys gives every mission a charm that few other titles of the era matched. The playful tone, paired with sharp Dreamcast visuals and smooth controls, made Toy Commander a memorable early showcase for what the console could deliver.
Toy Commander offers a single player campaign packed with over forty missions, each tied to a different theme or vehicle type. The campaign rotates between racing, dogfights, escort runs, demolition tasks, and timed objectives, keeping the pace fresh from start to finish. A four player split screen multiplayer mode lets friends battle across the same household battlefields, with deathmatch and race options available. Weapons range from machine guns and rockets to homing missiles, and each toy vehicle handles differently in flight or on the floor. Progression rewards players with new toys, harder missions, and access to fresh rooms in the house, giving a steady sense of growth without heavy menus or upgrade trees. Boss battles against giant toy commanders break up the standard missions and test the skills players build over time. With its tight controls, varied missions, strong split screen, and creative setting, Toy Commander stands as one of the most charming action games on the Dreamcast and a title that still rewards revisits today.